Results 81 to 90 of about 907 (139)

Iran-Arab Relations: A Brief History and the Present in the Conditions of the Western Issued Global Disorder

Diplomatic Service, 2023
Iranians identify themselves with the Aryans, heirs of the great empires of Achaemenids and Sassanids, poets — philosophers of the Middle Ages — Saadi, Hafez, Ferdowsi, Khayyam, recognized throughout the world. The state religion of Iran is Shiism.
A. Mustafabeyli
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Conquest and Islamization of Iraq

, 2023
This book examines the early Muslim conquests that started with the first caliph, Abu Bakr, and accelerated during the reign of the second caliph, Omar. During this time, the Sassanids were destroyed, the political and commercial order of Rome was turned
Hüseyin Gökalp
semanticscholar   +1 more source

La théorie militaire sassanide : regards croisés

Antiquité Tardive, 2022
Sasanian military theory has not been studied in depth since C. A. Inostrancev’s paper, published in 1926, which proposed a translation of the Persian Ēwēn-nāmag cited by Ibn Qutayba in the ‘Uyūn al-aḫbār. This article offers a reassessment of this topic and aims to give a wider look at the theoretical sources which were part of the Iranian de re ...
Petitjean, Maxime, Berriah, Mehdi
openaire   +3 more sources

Notes numismatiques sassanide et arabo-sassanide

Studia Iranica, 2008
La premiere note concerne l’introduction dans le monnayage d’Ohrmazd I (272/273) et de Vahrām I (273-276) d’une deuxieme ligne dans la legende de l’avers, que l’A. propose de lire comme ī ardasīr ou ī ardaxsahr, et la signification qui peut lui etre apportee. La seconde note concerne l’usage de la mention « pa nām ī yazd » (« au nom de dieu ») dans les
openaire   +2 more sources

Bronze royal sassanide

Syria, 1955
Parrot André. Bronze royal sassanide. In: Syria. Tome 32 fascicule 3-4, 1955. pp. 308-309.
openaire   +2 more sources

Timeless threads: Exploring zero-waste design principles in ancient Persian clothing

Fashion, Style & Popular Culture
This study explores the principles of zero-waste and minimal-waste design within historical Persian garments from the pre-Islamic period, examining how these ancient techniques can inform contemporary sustainable fashion practices.
H. Choopani, Roshanak Davari
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Bisotun–Madharan route: the reconstruction of a lost communication route in the southern part of the Bisotun–Sahneh plain

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society
According to Islamic geographical texts, the route that passed along the southern bank of the Gamasiab River on the current Bisotun–Sahneh plain, connecting Kermanshah (Qarmisin) and Bisotun (Behistun) to Madharan, Kangavar (Qasr al-Lusus), and ...
Iraj Rezaei
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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